NEW DELHI: Google Voice Assistant that was made available in Reliance JioPhones in December 2017, has seen a six-fold growth in its usage, the company has announced.
In a move to empower feature phone users in the country, Google on December 5, announced to bring its Voice Assistant on Reliance JioPhone.
This was the first time that Voice Assistant was made available in any feature phone.
"Since we launched the Google Assistant on the first feature phone in December, the Reliance JioPhones, usage of the Assistant in India has grown six times over the past four weeks," Caesar Sengupta, Vice President, Next Billion Users Team at Google, said in a blog post.
With Google Assistant, the next billion users are fast adopting cutting-edge technology "astonishingly quickly".
"This isn't just due to many semi-literate or illiterate users, but also the fact that typing is difficult for people who never grew up with a computer keyboard," he mentioned.
There are estimates that web content is more than 50 per cent English. Hindi, the fourth language in terms of global speakers, is not even in the top 30 languages for web content.
"In countries like India, the generation coming online now is more comfortable in their native language than in English, and so language can be a big blocker to expanding Internet access," he said.
Going forward, Google believes the demand for local content will reverse the language imbalance, leading to an Internet more inclusive of the entire world's language diversity.
According to Sengupta, the next billion users will be the first to truly embrace ubiquitous computing, expecting apps to work in a natural way rather than having to learn all the artificial commands that we did on PCs.
The future of the Internet is in the hands of the next billion users - the latest generation of users in places like Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and Nigeria.
"A mobile-only mindset, an instinct for ubiquitous computing and a demand for localised content are three key things that are driving next billion users to connect to the Internet," the Google executive reiterated.
Today, more than three billion people -- more than half of them in Asia -- own smartphones.
Most of the next billion users have never used a PC and may never use one.
"They don't think of the Internet as something you access with a mouse and a keyboard. A computer is a smartphone, and it also doubles up as a television, a wallet, a classroom and a portal for government services," Sengupta noted.
In a move to empower feature phone users in the country, Google on December 5, announced to bring its Voice Assistant on Reliance JioPhone.
This was the first time that Voice Assistant was made available in any feature phone.
"Since we launched the Google Assistant on the first feature phone in December, the Reliance JioPhones, usage of the Assistant in India has grown six times over the past four weeks," Caesar Sengupta, Vice President, Next Billion Users Team at Google, said in a blog post.
With Google Assistant, the next billion users are fast adopting cutting-edge technology "astonishingly quickly".
"This isn't just due to many semi-literate or illiterate users, but also the fact that typing is difficult for people who never grew up with a computer keyboard," he mentioned.
There are estimates that web content is more than 50 per cent English. Hindi, the fourth language in terms of global speakers, is not even in the top 30 languages for web content.
"In countries like India, the generation coming online now is more comfortable in their native language than in English, and so language can be a big blocker to expanding Internet access," he said.
Going forward, Google believes the demand for local content will reverse the language imbalance, leading to an Internet more inclusive of the entire world's language diversity.
According to Sengupta, the next billion users will be the first to truly embrace ubiquitous computing, expecting apps to work in a natural way rather than having to learn all the artificial commands that we did on PCs.
The future of the Internet is in the hands of the next billion users - the latest generation of users in places like Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and Nigeria.
"A mobile-only mindset, an instinct for ubiquitous computing and a demand for localised content are three key things that are driving next billion users to connect to the Internet," the Google executive reiterated.
Today, more than three billion people -- more than half of them in Asia -- own smartphones.
Most of the next billion users have never used a PC and may never use one.
"They don't think of the Internet as something you access with a mouse and a keyboard. A computer is a smartphone, and it also doubles up as a television, a wallet, a classroom and a portal for government services," Sengupta noted.
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